$10 Liberty Gold Eagles

$10 Liberty Head (Coronet) Gold Eagles — classic pre-1933 US gold, graded and certified by NGC and PCGS. In stock in San Antonio.

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About $10 Liberty Gold Eagles

The $10 Liberty Eagle is a classic series of United States gold coinage struck from 1838 through 1907, representing one of the longest-running and most historically significant denominations in American numismatics. Each coin contains .48375 troy oz of gold at .900 fineness (.100 copper alloy), giving the series its characteristic warm, rich color. The obverse bears a coronet portrait of Liberty — a design refined over the series' long production run — while the reverse features a heraldic eagle. Coins dated before 1866 lack a motto above the eagle, while later issues carry "In God We Trust," providing a natural collector distinction within the series.

The $10 Liberty Eagle spans the Pre-Civil War, Reconstruction, Gilded Age, and early twentieth-century eras, making date and mintmark collecting deeply intertwined with American economic history. Issues were struck at multiple branch mints — including Philadelphia, New Orleans, San Francisco, Carson City, and Denver — yielding a broad matrix of date-and-mint combinations. Certified examples grading MS-60 and above are considerably scarcer than their circulated counterparts, and higher-grade survivors from certain branch mints represent genuine numismatic rarities. The PCGS MS64 1926-P is a representative example of the late, Philadelphia-struck coins that are among the more accessible issues for date-set collectors.

On CoinDuffle, this category brings together $10 Liberty Eagles from multiple dealers, spanning a wide range of dates, mint facilities, and certified grades. Listings include both certified (PCGS, NGC) and raw examples across circulated and uncirculated grades, from problem-free type coins to condition-census-caliber specimens.

Updated June 2026

Frequently asked questions

A $10 Liberty Eagle is a United States gold coin struck from 1838 to 1907, with a face value of ten dollars. Each coin is composed of .900 fine gold and contains approximately .48375 troy oz of the metal. The obverse features a coronet portrait of Liberty, and the reverse depicts a heraldic eagle. The series was produced across multiple U.S. Mint facilities over its nearly 70-year run.